Journal of Dermatological Treatment (Dec 2024)

Association of disease duration and PASI response rates at week 12 in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis receiving biologics in the real-world psoriasis study of health outcomes (PSoHO)

  • Andreas Pinter,
  • Kilian Eyerich,
  • Antonio Costanzo,
  • Alyssa Garrelts,
  • Christopher Schuster,
  • Can Mert,
  • Anastasia Lampropoulou,
  • Konstantinos Fotiou,
  • Julia-Tatjana Maul,
  • Kim A. Papp

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/09546634.2024.2350227
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 35, no. 1

Abstract

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AbstractPurpose Currently, in the treatment of moderate-to-severe psoriasis (PsO) there is a lack of evidence demonstrating optimal biologic treatment response with respect to disease duration. The aim of this post-hoc analysis, using real world data from the Psoriasis Study of Health Outcomes (PSoHO), is to provide evidence if early intervention with biologics is associated with better treatment outcomes and if there is any difference among drug classes or individual biologics.Materials and methods For this post-hoc analysis patients were categorised into two subgroups according to shorter (≤2 years) or longer (>2 years) disease duration. Analysis was performed on anti-interleukin (IL)-17A cohort vs other biologics cohort, anti-IL-17A vs other drug classes, and pairwise comparisons of ixekizumab vs individual biologics, provided that the statistical models converged. Analysis investigated the association of disease duration with the proportion of patients achieving 100% improvement in Psoriasis Area Severity Index score (PASI 100) at week 12. Adjusted comparative analyses, reported as odds ratio (OR), were performed using Frequentist Model Averaging (FMA) for each cohort or treatments within each subcategory of the subgroups.Results At week 12, anti-IL-17A and other biologics cohorts displayed minimal differences in numerical response rate for PASI 100 with respect to disease duration. The anti-IL-17A cohort showed a higher numerical PASI 100 response rate compared to the other biologic cohort irrespective of disease duration (≤2 years: 36.7% vs 21.8%; >2 years: 35.8% vs 21.9%).Conclusion Overall, the results do not clearly indicate that treating patients early is critical in achieving optimal patient outcomes. Furthermore, patients treated with ixekizumab show numerically higher response rates relative to other individual biologics irrespective of disease duration.

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